Pubdate: Tue, 12 Oct 2010 Source: El Paso Times (TX) Copyright: 2010 El Paso Times Contact: http://www.elpasotimes.com/townhall/ci_14227323 Website: http://www.elpasotimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/829 Author: Adriana Gomez Licon Bookmark: http://mapinc.org/topic/Juarez JUAREZ VIOLENCE LEAVES THOUSANDS OF CHILDREN ORPHANED, TRAUMATIZED JUAREZ -- Pedro turned 9 years old the day somebody killed his father. A gunman shot him in the head at a convenience store last summer. "Pedro was enraged," said his mother, Bertha, a social worker. She did not want her family's last names to be published for safety reasons. "I told him that sometimes things happen that we don't understand, but that his father is with God." Pedro heard the words, but the violence he experienced changed him. Once docile and quiet, he became an angry child, his mother said. He also began to have breathing problems. As an epidemic of violence spreads through this border city of 1.3 million, more and more children are left without one or both parents. Therapists estimate that about 10,000 children have been orphaned because of drug-cartel violence that exploded in 2008. Since then more than 6,600 people have been killed in Juarez, giving the city the unwelcome designation as the world's homicide capital. Juan Gonzalez, director of a nonprofit organization that offers psychotherapy for low-income families, said the majority of murder victims were parents of at least two children. Most of those killed were between the ages of 20 and 39. Juarez, a place where murders routinely go unsolved, generally is not equipped to provide psychological treatment for children who become orphans. This means that more violence could be simmering just below the surface, Gonzalez said. "In 10 or 15 years, these children could become criminals seeking revenge for losing their parents," he said. Bertha's oldest son, Humberto, 21, was tempted. "Some kids told him they were going to help him find who killed his father if he sold drugs," Bertha said. "They wanted to lure him into criminal activities." In terms of psychological help, especially neglected areas are in northwest and southeast Juarez -- the most dangerous sections of the city. Bertha said she cannot afford to drive her three children from the western outskirts to a clinic that offers psychotherapy. Bertha lives in a spacious but unfinished house in an area where most streets are unpaved. Because her daughter, Ivonne, is a U.S. citizen, Bertha sent her to school in El Paso, away from the violence. One day in El Paso, Ivonne, 14, cut her arms. "She told me, 'I did it because I wanted to feel pain like my father felt when he was killed.' " Bertha brought Ivonne back home to Juarez. Therapists want to start a directory of 100 psychologists to reach out to families such as Bertha's. Other cities in Chihuahua and in Mexico want to use Juarez as a model to organize similar groups. Some of the techniques therapists are learning in Juarez are methods to treat post-traumatic stress disorder. "Juarez is going through symptoms that are very similar to the ones in countries in war," Gonzalez said. The process is hard for children younger than 10 because they are highly dependent on both parents, he said. But it can be just as hard for teenagers, who are in the process of finding their identities. Gonzalez said the treatments in place are for groups because of the large number of children in need. Alberto Rodriguez Cervantes, a professor with the Regional Institute of Family Studies in the city of Chihuahua, has trained therapists in Juarez on how to treat orphans. He said children suffer from anxiety and eating and sleeping disorders. They also become students at risk of failure or quitting school. Rodriguez said the group of therapists wants to extend training to police and paramedics because they often are the first to establish contact with children in murder cases. "We want to teach them emotional first-aid techniques," he said. For instance, sometimes the healing process starts when children get to see their fallen parent one last time at the crime scene, he said. Besides the therapists' plans, Chihuahua's new governor promised last week at his inauguration to confront Juarez's problem of orphanhood. Cesar Duarte instructed the state Treasury Department to create a fund of about $8 million to treat children in Juarez who are left without parents. Rodriguez said government had not done enough. "We are very disappointed in the government because there has not been real support for children facing orphanhood," he said. "But it is a collateral damage the whole community is suffering from." In a recent church therapy session for kids coping with orphanhood, a 16-year-old girl looked timid. The teenager twirled her hair repeatedly and smiled, but it was clear that grief invaded her thoughts. She wrote on a heart-shaped sheet of paper that sadness equaled guilt. One year ago, her father was killed in Juarez. "I was happy, optimistic. I cared about different things before," she said. "Now it is the violence." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake